Estimate flattening of the Earth

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The discussion revolves around estimating the flattening of the Earth using the formula f⊕ ≡ 1 - (Rp / Re), where Re is the equatorial radius and Rp is the polar radius. Participants explore concepts of hydrostatic equilibrium and gravitational potential, emphasizing the balance of forces at different latitudes. The conversation highlights confusion regarding the contributions of centripetal and gravitational forces in a rotating frame of reference. Various methods are proposed, including potential energy calculations, but discrepancies in results prompt further investigation into the accuracy of the approaches. Ultimately, the participants aim to clarify the relationship between forces and the resulting shape of the Earth.
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Homework Statement



The flattening of the Earth is defined as
f ≡ 1 - (Rp - Re)
where Re is the radius of the equator and Rp is half of the distance between the North Pole and the South Pole. Estimate the flattening of the Earth.

Homework Equations


Fg = Gm1m2/r2

The Attempt at a Solution


apole = GME/Rp2
aequator = GME/RE2 = ω2RE

How do I approach this problem, I'm so clueless. How do I carry on from here?
 
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Yoonique said:
1 - (Rp - Re)
Maybe 1 - (Rp / Re)?
Treat the Earth as a rotating ball of water. Since the water at the surface does not run towards the poles, despite the spin, what can you say about the surface - i.e. what is it that is constant over the surface?
 
haruspex said:
Maybe 1 - (Rp / Re)?
Treat the Earth as a rotating ball of water. Since the water at the surface does not run towards the poles, despite the spin, what can you say about the surface - i.e. what is it that is constant over the surface?
Is a typo, suppose to be 1 - (Rp / Re). Ok, after reading about some article is it regarding about hydrostatic equilibrium? Because I haven't learn about it yet. So I think there must be a constant radial force all over the surface of the sphere for it to be in hydrostatic equilibrium? At the poles, the force is just GMEMW/Rp2. At the equator, the force is GMEMW/Re2 + ω2Re. For both of the forces to be balanced, Rp must decrease and Re must increase thus resulting in the flattening of the Earth? Am I right? I don't know anything about hydrostatic equilibrium so my concept would be wrong.
 
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Yoonique said:
Is a typo, suppose to be 1 - (Rp / Re). Ok, after reading about some article is it regarding about hydrostatic equilibrium? Because I haven't learn about it yet. So I think there must be a constant radial force all over the surface of the sphere for it to be in hydrostatic equilibrium? At the poles, the force is just GMEMW/Rp2. At the equator, the force is GMEMW/Re2 + ω2Re. For both of the forces to be balanced, Rp must decrease and Re must increase thus resulting in the flattening of the Earth? Am I right? I don't know anything about hydrostatic equilibrium so my concept would be wrong.
No, it's not a constant (magnitude) force. If you were in a boat on the surface, anywhere, which way would gravity act? What does that tell you about potential energy levels?
 
The gravity would act towards the center of the Earth. All points on the surface are equipotential when the sphere of water rotates so the surface water does not move around surface area of the sphere, it remains at 'rest'? So I assume this is the reason for hydrostatic equilibrium? The surface water at the poles must have the same potential as the surface water at the equator.
 
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Yoonique said:
The gravity would act towards the center of the Earth. All points on the surface are equipotential when the sphere of water rotates so the surface water does not move around surface area of the sphere, it remains at 'rest'? So I assume this is the reason for hydrostatic equilibrium? The surface water at the poles must have the same potential as the surface water at the equator.
Right, so can you figure out what the potential is at a given latitude and distance from Earth's centre? (For the purposes of calculating the gravitational potential, pretend the Earth is spherical, and you are considering a point outside that sphere.)
 
haruspex said:
Right, so can you figure out what the potential is at a given latitude and distance from Earth's centre? (For the purposes of calculating the gravitational potential, pretend the Earth is spherical, and you are considering a point outside that sphere.)
I'm not very sure how does the centripetal force contribute to the potential. I assume potential is potential energy per unit mass and potential energy is ∫-F(r) dr
Potential the poles: -GMe/Rp
Potential the equator: -1/Mw ∫F(R) dR= -1/Mw ∫[GMeMw/Re2 + Mwω2Re dR = GMe/Re - ω2Re2/2
 
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Yoonique said:
I'm not very sure how does the centripetal force contribute to the potential. I assume potential is potential energy per unit mass and potential energy is ∫-F(r) dr
Potential the poles: -GMe/Rp
Potential the equator: -1/Mw ∫F(R) dR= -1/Mw ∫[GMeMw/Re2 + Mwω2Re dR = GMe/Re - ω2Re2/2
Sorry to do this to you but I'm going to change tack. I believe consideration of potentials will work, but I was finding it confusing and I wish to avoid confusing you.
Instead, consider the net force at some point on the surface at latitude theta. This will not point at the Earth's centre. You can get an expression for the aproximate angular deviation from the radial line. You can use that angle to find out how rapidly radius of the surface changes as theta changes. Solving the ODE gives the profile.
 
haruspex said:
Sorry to do this to you but I'm going to change tack. I believe consideration of potentials will work, but I was finding it confusing and I wish to avoid confusing you.
Instead, consider the net force at some point on the surface at latitude theta. This will not point at the Earth's centre. You can get an expression for the aproximate angular deviation from the radial line. You can use that angle to find out how rapidly radius of the surface changes as theta changes. Solving the ODE gives the profile.
(GMe/r2)cosθ = ω2rcosθ

How do I continue from here?
 
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  • #10
Yoonique said:
(GMe/r2)cosθ = ω2rcosθ

How do I continue from here?
That doesn't look like what I had in mind.
Consider a point at distance r from Earth's centre, at latitude theta. There is a gravitational force towards Earth's centre. Working in terms of pseudo forces, there is a centrifugal force. The resultant of these two forces makes an angle, alpha, to the radial line. Find alpha as a function of r, theta, etc.
Next, the local horizontal (i.e. the surface tangent) must be at right angles to this. Consider a small change ##d\theta## to the latitude. Find dr as a function of that and alpha.
Combining these gives you a differential equation.
 
  • #11
haruspex said:
Instead, consider the net force at some point on the surface at latitude theta. This will not point at the Earth's centre. You can get an expression for the aproximate angular deviation from the radial line. You can use that angle to find out how rapidly radius of the surface changes as theta changes. Solving the ODE gives the profile.
Is that necessary? The first approach looked fine and just two steps away from the solution if you plug in some parameters at the right places.
It is an approximation, of course, but it will get the first order right and the second order is much smaller.
 
  • #12
mfb said:
Is that necessary? The first approach looked fine and just two steps away from the solution if you plug in some parameters at the right places.
It is an approximation, of course, but it will get the first order right and the second order is much smaller.
Yes, as I posted, I believe my original approach works, but it looked like it was going to be hard explaining why the signs are as they are. Please take it further.
 
  • #13
mfb said:
Is that necessary? The first approach looked fine and just two steps away from the solution if you plug in some parameters at the right places.
It is an approximation, of course, but it will get the first order right and the second order is much smaller.
The answer should be 0.003 but I got 0.002 using the potential method. So this method isn't accurate enough?
 
  • #14
haruspex said:
That doesn't look like what I had in mind.
Consider a point at distance r from Earth's centre, at latitude theta. There is a gravitational force towards Earth's centre. Working in terms of pseudo forces, there is a centrifugal force. The resultant of these two forces makes an angle, alpha, to the radial line. Find alpha as a function of r, theta, etc.
Next, the local horizontal (i.e. the surface tangent) must be at right angles to this. Consider a small change ##d\theta## to the latitude. Find dr as a function of that and alpha.
Combining these gives you a differential equation.
image.jpg


I can't really visualize or understand this as I'm not used to using a rotating frame of reference. So centrifugal force is in the opposite direction of centripetal force right? So if I'm in the same rotating frame of reference, I'm seeing the point being push outwards? The resultant force is the apparent weight?
Because in an inertial frame of reference, the resultant of gravitational force and normal force provide the centripetal force. The apparent weight is the normal force. I'm little confused in the case of a rotating frame of reference.
 
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  • #15
Yoonique said:
So alpha + theta is 90°?
No.
ocean surface.jpg
 
  • #16
haruspex said:
Is the resultant force the apparent gravitational force felt?
 
  • #17
Yoonique said:
Is the resultant force the apparent gravitational force felt?
Yes.
 
  • #18
haruspex said:
Yes.
Do I need to approximate anything to find a relationship between α and θ? I can't find a direct relationship ;/
 
  • #19
Yoonique said:
Do I need to approximate anything to find a relationship between α and θ? I can't find a direct relationship ;/
An approximation valid for small alpha would certainly be reasonable.
 
  • #20
haruspex said:
An approximation valid for small alpha would certainly be reasonable.
Why does the potential method yield 1.7x10-4 while the given answer is 3.4x10-4?
 
  • #21
I guess you mean 10-3. I get 10.9 km difference in radius which is 1.7*10-3. The true value is ~21.4 km.
The factor 2 suggests some stupid mistake, but I don't find one now. Check the approach via the local angle of net force to see if that works.

1/(1/(6370km)+(2 pi/day)^2(6370km)^2/(2*gravitational constant * mass of earth))
 
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